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William Gaultiere,
Ph.D.
Executive
Director of New Hope, Clinical Psychologist with ChristianSoulCare.com
Jeff and
Rhonda (names and identifying information changed) were arguing
before they even got into my office. I smiled anyway, motioned
for them to have a seat, and shut the door on eavesdroppers in
the waiting room. They were fighting about how to parent their
two boys, Kyle and Kramer, ages nine and five. "You're being
too soft on them Rhonda," Jeff complained. "You're doing Kyle's
homework for him. He has to learn to do it himself. When he
gets out in the real world his boss won't do his work for him,
that's for sure! And neither of the boys do any chores around
the house. When I was Kyle's age I had to empty the garbage everyday
and shovel the snow off the sidewalk."
"I know.
I know," Rhonda interrupted. "And you had to walk to school in
the rain! You just don't understand. It's a lot of work caring
for the boys. It seems that I'm always cooking for them and cleaning
up after them and helping them to treat each other nicely. I
just don't have the energy to be getting them to do chores in
this stage. Besides, they're growing up so fast. Kramer will
be starting school this fall and I want to enjoy him. My days
with them are so busy. I feel good if I got through the day without
falling apart and am able to make time for us to play a game or
go to the park. Maybe if you helped out more around the house
and spent more time with the boys."
Jeff shot
back before Rhonda could finish, "Whenever I try to get involved
you shoot me down! I can't even correct the kids without you
stepping in because you don't want their feelings hurt. You."
It was my
turn to interrupt in order to turn down the heat and re-focus
things. "Jeff, it sounds like you have some good ideas for teaching
your kids to be responsible. And Rhonda, I can see that you're
connecting well with your boys, showing concern for their feelings
and playing with them. The problem I see is that the two of you
are on opposite extremes. Instead of attacking one another's
approach you need to learn from each other. Jeff you need more
of Rhonda's compassion in your parenting and Rhonda you need more
of Jeff's discipline."
I showed Jeff
and Rhonda that they were confusing their boys with their approaches
that split apart God's grace and truth. Children need caring
and responsibility, connectivity and structure from
each parent.
What's
Your Approach to Parenting?
If I could
sit down and talk to you right now I'd ask you, why are you
reading this article? What is it about Christian parenting that
you're eager to learn? And I'd try to get to know you as
a parent. You probably identify somewhat with either Jeff or
Rhonda and I'd try to understand that. I'd ask you some questions
about your parenting to see how you're balancing God's grace and
truth in the way you parent your child. So let's do that in the
form of a survey that I developed for parents like you. Once
we understand your position then I can help you to grow into more
of what God has for you and your family.
Parenting
the Way God Parents Us
My understanding
of Christian parenting begins with the model that God is the perfect
parent to us. To parent our children well we need to first be
parented by God. He is the Father from whom all fatherhood derives
its name (Ephesians 3:15). When we connect with God's love to
us through prayer and our relationships in the Body of Christ
then we have love to give. "We love because He first loved us"
(1 John 4:19, NIV) is the succinct way that the Apostle John described
it. It's the same with God's truth. When we structure our lives
according to God's Word, identifying ourselves with Him, obeying
Him, and practicing spiritual disciplines then we have wisdom
to share with others. Through Moses God has told us, "These commandments
that I give you today are to be upon your hearts. Impress them
on your children. Talk about them when you sit at home and when
you walk along the road" (Deuteronomy 6:6-7, NIV).
The amazing
thing about God's grace and truth is that they're completely integrated.
The Psalmist gives us an unforgettable, poetic picture of this
by announcing that with God, "Unfailing love and truth have met
together. Righteousness and peace have kissed!" (Psalm 85:10,
NLT). In God, you can't have the connection of love without the
structure of truth and you can't have the structure of truth without
the connection of love. The Psalmist emphasizes this by reversing
the order of the pairing in the second half of the verse from
love and truth to righteousness (truth) and peace (love). Throughout
the Scripture we see the interplay between and integration of
these two wonderful sides of God's character. This is best seen
in Jesus Christ, who, the Apostle John tells us, came to us to
bring us the fullness of God's grace and truth (John 1:17). Jesus
showed us that God is wholly gracious and wholly truthful, completely
loving and completely holy. In other words, there's a tender
and a tough side to God's character. And so in the
Bible we see in the way that God parents Israel and in the way
that Jesus ministers to people that not only does God offer Himself
to care for our needs, but also he disciplines us to produce in
us a harvest of righteousness and peace (Hebrews 12:4-11).
When Grace
and Truth are Out of Balance
Eugene Petersen's
translation of the Apostle Paul's instructions to fathers brings
out that children need to be trained in a tender way: "Take them
by the hand and lead them in the way of the Master" (Ephesians
6:4, MSG). The diagram below, "Grace and Truth in Parenting,"
illustrates how difficult it is for parents to integrate grace
and truth. God keeps grace and truth in perfect balance in the
way that He parents us, but we tend to overweight one or the other.
We may try so hard to be caring that we don't provide the structure
and discipline of truth and then we become parents who are enmeshed
and permissive. And if we err too far on the other side, disconnecting
emotionally from our kids to pressure or punish them into doing
what we think is right then we become detached and authoritarian
parents. Both extremes are hurtful divisions of God's grace and
truth.

Love without
Limits
Of
course, love without limits isn't really love at all. "If you
refuse to discipline your children, it proves you don't love them;
if you love your children you'll be prompt to discipline them"
(Proverbs 13:24, NLT). Rhonda's gentle way with her kids and
the priority she put on being available to them and playing with
them were certainly loving expressions. But her love went sour
when it was split off from limits. She was living by the motto:
"I have to fix your problems no matter what you do." She was
enmeshed with her boys' feelings and took responsibility
for them. When Kyle had a hard day at school and came home grumpy
and irritable then Rhonda became depressed and pressured him to
get over it so that she could feel better. Kyle learned that
getting too close too mom felt intrusive or overwhelming. He
felt responsible for her well-being and so he became emotionally
detached. With Kramer things were different on the surface.
Because he was scared to go to pre-kindergarten Rhonda felt insecure
and anxious for him and "protected" him by keeping him home another
year. In time Kramer developed a pattern of seeking attention
for his problems and getting his mom to fix things for him. So
because truth (discipline and structure) was being de-emphasized
the boys weren't learning to take responsibility for their feelings,
problems, or (as Jeff pointed out) contributions to the household.
Many people
today don't see a problem with this "love without limits" approach.
They want to be their child's friend. Maybe when they were children
they were beat up by judgment and controlled by rules and so they
don't want to do that to their children! I saw a shocking example
of this coming from a Christian home a number of years ago when
a teenage boy, I call him "Ricky," was referred to me for help
with depression and compulsive masturbation. But his problems
were much more serious than that. He lied. He stole. He violated
girls sexually. And he went to church and youth group every week.
He was raised in a Christian home and identified himself as a
Christian, but he had no conscience. He felt no conviction
for his sins, no empathy for the troubles he caused his parents,
and no sadness for the girls he violated. He had no self-control.
And it's no wonder because at home he received no discipline or
consequences for his irresponsible and abusive behaviors, just
futile attempts to "love" him with niceness and "help" him by
doing things like getting an attorney to keep him out of juvenile
detention - efforts which were interspersed with criticism and
nagging from his enmeshing mother and withdrawal from his permissive
father. Their approach wasn't loving or helpful. Ricky's deviant
behavior needed to be confronted and reformed through painful
consequences (in the context of an understanding and caring relationship).
So that's what I did and it's what I taught his parents to do.
Thank God he started to feel some empathy and conviction and gradually
he became more responsible, appropriate, and considerate. I think
we got to him just in time!
Just the
Cold, Hard Truth!
In our permissive
society today it's obvious to most people that "truth without
grace" is not right. Nonetheless, I see some parents, like Jeff,
who slide into this extreme. Their hard line with other people,
even their own kids, is: "You have to fix your problems without
my support." It's not that Jeff wasn't trying to love his kids.
In fact, he interpreted his cold confrontations by saying, "It's
only because I love my boys." He was right that his boys needed
to be doing chores around the house and to learn to behave responsibly.
And they needed firm parental discipline to learn to respect authority
and to develop self-control. But to receive these truths from
their father they needed to trust him and to sense that he had
compassion for them. It wasn't enough for him to direct or discipline
his boys because he loved them; he needed to first show
them his love (as Rhonda kept saying) and then provide accountability
in a loving way.
The children
of authoritarian parents like Jeff are liable to rebel. This
is why the Apostle Paul advises, "Fathers, do not provoke your
children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction
of the Lord" (Ephesians 6:4, NASB). Other children of authoritarian
parents become compliant, trying to please for fear of the parent's
anger. Still other children become passive-aggressive, which
is a combination of pleasing and rebelling, being compliant to
the parent's face to avoid conflict or criticism and then quietly
resisting. When these hard-nosed parents communicate an expectation
they shut down any protest from their kids, calling it defiance.
But not only do kids need to learn to submit to authority and
obey they also need to learn to stand up to authority by respectfully
disagreeing. Jesus makes this point in his "Parable of the Two
Sons" (Matthew 21:28-32). There's a father who owns a vineyard
and tells both of his sons to go work in the vineyard. The first
son stands up to his dad and refuses to work in the vineyard,
but later he changes his mind and goes. The second son says,
"Sure dad, I'll go!" But he doesn't. Jesus praises the protesting
son who later obeys and condemns the passive-aggressive son.
Teeter-Tottering
Between Grace and Truth
You may see
that at times you're like Jeff and Rhonda, going up and
down, up and down on the grace tetter-totter. This is perhaps
the most common problem that we parents have in trying to balance
grace and truth. We try to be compassionate and caring with our
children. We feel bad when they complain, "C'mon Dad. It's not
fair. I've got all this homework and you're telling me that I
still have to empty all the garbages." So we "cut 'em some slack."
Or instead of punishing disobedience we give more chances and
nag them until they obey. Or when our kids beg for more dessert,
to stay up later, or to have some extra spending money we give
in, thinking that we're showing our love. But, all the while,
anger is building inside us and eventually it bursts out: we come
down hard on them with harsh words, sudden high expectations,
or severe punishments. Does your parenting ever look like this?
I have to admit that mine does at times. It's hard to be consistent!
Of course, this flip-flopping is quite confusing for our children.
They like the pushover parent better than the drill sergeant and
will likely ride out the storm until the niceness returns. But
regardless of what they want, what they need is
limits in the context of love, grace along with the structure
of discipline.
Children who
live with grace and truth split apart will also do their own flip-flopping.
You probably remember hearing about the story of John Walker.
His reversal was extreme and tragic. According to the Boston
Globe ("The Road to Treason" written by Jeff Jacoby, December
13, 2001), his "`oh-so-progressive parents' had answered `Yes'
to his every whim, indulged his every fancy, permitted - even
praised - his every passion." His mother said "it was good for
a child to find a passion" and his father was "proud of John for
pursuing an alternative course" that progressed from hip-hop CD's
with very nasty lyrics at 14, dropping out of high school at 16,
dressing in white robes and a skullcap along with other Muslim
followers of Malcom X, moving to Yemen and befriending gunmen
who'd been to Chechnya to fight the Russians, and joining an Islamic
extremist group in Pakistan. Even when it was clear that their
son, who then called himself Abdul Hamid, was deep into Islamic
fanaticism (he told them he philosophically supported Osama bin
Laden's terrorist bombings of the USS Cole that killed 17 American
servicemen) his liberal, permissive parents wouldn't pull in the
reins, but continued to enable him by wiring him more money.
Without limits or guidance from his parents he developed a disdain
for authority and a lust to be free to do as he pleased with no
accountability that left him in a vacuum - desperate for love.
and standards, discipline, truth, God. Finally his anti-authoritarianism
took him full circle and he joined an ultra-authoritarian, extremist
sect of Islam: the Taliban in Afghanistan. He flip-flopped from
wanting permissiveness to wanting authoritarianism, from pushing
his parents away to attaching himself to Osama bin Laden's Al
Qaida terrorist training organization.
Getting
Grace and Truth in Balance
I helped Jeff
and Rhonda learn to stop reacting and criticizing each other,
but instead to take ownership of their feelings and weaknesses
and work on them. Jeff needed to worry less about his standards
for his boys and learn to relate with them more, connecting with
their interests and considering their feelings. This meant spending
more time with his boys and developing his compassion for them.
And Rhonda needed to realize that two of the most caring things
she could do for Kyle and Kramer were to teach them to be responsible
by giving them chores to do and to set limits for them by disciplining
them when their behavior was out of line. Rhonda needed to develop
more structure in her parenting. Jeff and Rhonda needed to integrate
grace and truth individually and as a couple. Like King David
who prayed, "O Lord, may your love and your truth always protect
me" (Psalm 40:11, NIV), they and their boys needed both sides
of God.
Become
more Gracious
"Grace" is
a theological word, first used by the Apostle Paul in the New
Testament to describe the favor (unconditional love and acceptance)
that God extends to sinners. Grace is a gift that originates
with God and can't be earned. So to be a grace-giving parent
you need to first receive it from God by admitting your need for
it and depending on Him in faith. We do this through prayer and
the sacraments, of course, but the primary way that we internalize
God's grace into our souls is through relationships with people
the Body of Christ. This is because "No one has ever seen God;
but if we love one another, God lives in us and His love is made
complete in us" (1 John 4:12, NIV). This means that the bonding
relationship that parents provide for their children is essential,
not only for their psychological development, but also for their
faith. I'll never forget when our first child, David,
was only a few months old my wife Kristi was talking to a friend
from church that also had an infant son. She worked outside the
home long hours every day and commented to Kristi, "It doesn't
matter to Jason that I'm not home with him. He can't tell the
difference who is caring for him." Kristi gently suggested otherwise,
but this friend wouldn't see it because she wasn't emotionally
connective. Jason's capacity to bond and to connect with God's
grace didn't develop as fully as it could have.
Let's get
real practical now by thinking of some specific ways to give our
kids more grace. Here's a list of examples of what you can do
to be a more grace-giving parent.
| Be kind,
even to a grumpy child |
Listen
patiently when your child is upset |
| Show
compassion for hurt feelings |
Give
lots of TLC when your child is sick |
| Take
your child on a special outing |
Affirm
your child's good qualities |
| Accept
your child's weaknesses |
Be quick
to forgive your child |
| Occasionally
give a gift for no reason |
Consider
your child's explanations in discipline |
For you to
work more of God's grace into your parenting in ways like these
you need to absorb more of it into your own being. In your personal
life you need to reach out to Christ's ambassadors for grace by
asking for what you need, taking it inside you through trust and
making use of it by relying on it continually. Then your eyes
and heart are opened and you can become a "cheerful giver," giving
from God's fullness instead of just trying harder to do what you
should and getting frustrated with yourself! (2 Corinthians 9:7).
For instance, when you know what it feels like to be listened
to with compassion then you can become more sensitive to and caring
towards your children's feelings. Or when you've asked someone
to accept you in your struggles then you're better able to embrace
your kids when they fall down. And if you've learned to rely
on comfort from your spouse or friend when you're hurt then you'll
be more likely to be patient and tender with your children's tears
and fears.
Honor Truth
More
Truth is about
reality, the structure of the way life is meant to be. It's the
way God set up the universe and it's exhibited in His laws and
creation. We learn the truth by studying God's creation and the
Bible, His Word to us. We live in truth by being honest and moral,
by doing what is right and good, by being holy and wholly as God
is. When we study and meditate on God's truth in the Scriptures
and live it out then we are in a good position as parents to train
our children in godliness. God's wisdom guides us in how to structure
our home, gives us godly values to teach our children, and encourages
us to discipline them in love when they get off track. But truth
by itself is like oat flake cereal without milk. It's healthy,
but too hard to swallow! So we need to "speak the truth in love"
to our kids (Ephesians 3:15). Let's think about some of the ways
that we can do this. How do we provide godly structure for our
children?
| Give
them standards to live by |
Teach
them godly values |
| Read
the Bible together |
Establish
house rules |
| Assign
them chores to do |
Set protective
limits on their behavior |
| Reinforce
positive behavior |
Let negative
consequences to choices teach them |
| Discipline
disobedience and disrespect |
Reward
honesty |
Even if our
children protest when we provide structure in a godly way they
still crave those boundaries. Have you heard about the study
where researchers took the fences off a pre-school playground
to see what the kids would do? It's fascinating. The kids all
huddled in the center, scared to venture out! Just yesterday
I heard an example of this. A mother said to me that her 12-year
old daughter had been playing at a friend's house and they went
into a chat room and pretended to be 18-years old and flirted
with men! In the age of the Internet that's like a parent's worst
nightmare. This mother handled it well though. Instead of reacting
with immediate panic or anger she considered that her daughter
was confessing this all on her own and so she calmly listened
to her daughter describe what she did and then asked her about
it. The daughter said, "I know we shouldn't have done it mom.
I don't want to do it again. Just tell me not to do it and I'll
tell her that I'm not going into chat rooms with her again."
She knew that she needed fences up in order to play safely and
went to her mom for help in erecting those boundaries.
William Gaultiere,
Ph.D. is the Executive Director of the New Hope Crisis Counseling
Center at the Crystal Cathedral and a Clinical Psychologist and
Spiritual Director with ChristianSoulCare.com. On his website
you can sign up for a free inspirational devotional e-mail.
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